加拿大法院与公司高管薪酬

IF 0.4 Q3 LAW Law and Development Review Pub Date : 2021-06-01 DOI:10.1515/ldr-2021-0046
S. McGinty
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引用次数: 0

摘要

与许多发达经济体一样,自20世纪80年代以来,加拿大企业高管的薪酬相对于普通工人的薪酬显著上升。这给公司治理带来了一个问题,因为人们担心这种趋势可能不会很好地为公司及其利益相关者服务,同时也给整个社会带来了一个问题,因为它对收入不平等的影响更普遍。这引起了人们的兴趣:机构在制定高管薪酬决策方面所发挥的作用,以及它们在解决这些问题方面可能发挥的作用。本文着眼于法院这一机构所扮演的角色,并有两个目的。首先,要从经验上理解法院在处理高管薪酬纠纷方面的实际做法。作者收集了加拿大法院在1876年至2018年间的一系列判决,其中一名公司高管对其薪酬的要求存在争议,以便更好地了解如何进入法院,谁依赖法院,他们使用什么规则,法院如何回应以及这些趋势如何随着时间的推移而演变。报告发现,随着时间的推移,高管薪酬纠纷的诉讼发生了很大变化,不同的利益相关者利用不同的法律领域——尤其是公司法、合同法和破产/安排法——对高管的薪酬权利提出争议。然而,近年来,诉讼已被压迫救济申请所主导,原告在大多数决定中成功地挑战了薪酬。这描绘了一幅与美国文献中发展的法院角色明显不同的图景,美国文献几乎只关注股东使用衍生诉讼来监督薪酬决定。第二是研究如何更好地利用法院,以纠正企业高管薪酬实践给企业利益相关者和整个社会带来的更广泛的问题。这表明,应考虑扩大公司雇员的压迫救济作用,作为一种政策选择,它将更好地反映利益相关者的治理模式,同时解决更广泛的不平等问题。
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The Courts and Corporate Executive Compensation in Canada
Abstract Corporate executive compensation in Canada, as in many developed economies, has risen significantly since the 1980s relative to that of the average worker. This has posed an issue for corporate governance due to concerns that the trend may not be serving the corporation and its stakeholders well, and also an issue for society as a whole due to its impact on income inequality more generally. This has raised interest in the role played by institutions in shaping executive pay decisions and also in what role they might play in resolving these issues. This paper looks at the role played by one such institution, the courts, with two ends in mind. The first is to gain an empirical understanding of what the courts actually do with respect to executive pay disputes. It does so by examining a set of decisions by Canadian courts between 1876 and 2018 collected by the author in which the claim of a corporate executive to their pay was at issue in order to get a better picture of how the courts are accessed, who relies on them, what rules they use, how the courts respond and how trends in these have evolved over time. It finds that the litigation of executive pay disputes has varied widely over time with a variety of stakeholders using a variety of legal areas – corporate law, contract law and bankruptcy/arrangement law in particular – to dispute the entitlement of executives to their pay. In recent years however litigation has come to be dominated by oppression remedy applications, with plaintiffs being successful in challenging pay in a majority of decisions. This paints a significantly different picture of the role of the courts than that developed in the American literature which focuses almost exclusively on shareholder use of derivative actions to monitor pay decisions. The second is to examine how better use might be made of the courts in order to remedy the broader problems for corporate stakeholders and society as a whole that corporate executive pay practice presents. It suggests that an expanded role for the oppression remedy by corporate employees should be considered as a policy option which would better reflect a stakeholder model of governance and address broader inequality concerns at the same time.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: Law and Development Review (LDR) is a top peer-reviewed journal in the field of law and development which explores the impact of law, legal frameworks, and institutions (LFIs) on development. LDR is distinguished from other law and economics journals in that its primary focus is the development aspects of international and domestic legal orders. The journal promotes global exchanges of views on law and development issues. LDR facilitates future global negotiations concerning the economic development of developing countries and sets out future directions for law and development studies. Many of the top scholars and practitioners in the field, including Professors David Trubek, Bhupinder Chimni, Michael Trebilcock, and Mitsuo Matsushita, have edited LDR issues and published articles in LDR. The journal seeks top-quality articles on law and development issues broadly, from the developing world as well as from the developed world. The changing economic conditions in recent decades render the law and development approach applicable to economic issues in developed countries as well as developing ones, and LDR accepts manuscripts on law and economic development issues concerning both categories of countries. LDR’s editorial board includes top scholars and professionals with diverse regional and academic backgrounds.
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